Judge, 1924-03-08 · page 30 of 36
Judge — March 8, 1924 — page 30: what you’re looking at
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Pyorrhoea Indammation of the gums, otherwise known aa Rigg’s Disease, or Pyorrboea, is a modern menace of mankind. Every reputable dentist will tell you that treated as a locat “disease 2 tg tncurable. All local operations are a cruel delusion. Pulling teeth cannot eradicate it. Even~ tually the unfortunate patient cannot use his artificial teeth because the plates over the tnflamed and cherry red gums cause him untold agony. The diMculty of mastication leads to poor nutrition, to various forms of disease, to hospitals, to irritability, to tragedies, to pre- mature death. MEDICAL METHODS CHANGED Progressive dentists and Dhysiclans will tell you that Correct constitutional methods are a success, We will send ‘ou a reprint of an article as far back as November, 1919, in the Dental Digest, “Pyor- thoea Corrected by Buitable Nutrition,” written by Alfred Walton, M.D., who cured his tested before and afterwards by well known professors at dental colleges. He used our method. Pyorrhoea is catarrh of the gums and the cause is thesame as the cause of catarrh elsewhere in the human body. Butter, cheese, oll, eggs, salt, in excess or in wrong com- binations, or any fermenting foods, produce mucus which, nits ne body, causes trouble in thé owels (colitis), or in the throat, broncl yubes. (bronchitis, or in the nose (rhinitis), and also is pushed the gums and teeth, producing a catarrhal cond! called PYORRHOEA, which loosens the teeth. The mented waste or mucus produces pus which excoriates pockets” and poisons the person's Eager f morsel of food. The teeth have had nothing to do with the whole pro- cess from beginning to end, except that their very exts- tence provides a natural channel in the gums along which the mucus exudes and forms pus pockets, abscesses. Avoid mucus-maki foods. Eat, as needed, suitable brain-and-nerve nourishing, solvent, laxative foods, etc ‘To increase brain power for special occasions at will is the first step towards seeing the way to multiplying wealth. SAVE TEETH—BUILD HEALTH ‘You can make your teeth firm again and remedy your stomach and other troubles at the same time by correcting your nutrition. Do not have your teeth extracted un- necessarily. It is a crime against yourself. Send for the reprint from Dental Digest and our educational booklet. Ten cents. Sworn statements. 6,000 pupils. BRINKLER SCHOOL OF EATING Dept. 16-E 131 W. Z2nd St., New York SEVEN DAYS ‘cut, samme positively wwtth a geruin’ dlamona. It yo8 Dey Ie went gest yous cont E TO INTRODUCE Chstomers, we quote these prices Here's the line—the has made hundreds of others independent. They arethelr ‘own bosses, working all or lime, ‘making money easter than ever before.” You can do it even without ex- Derience. We show you. Write today for our new plan. C. H. STUART & CO,, 350 Union St, Newark, New York food flavors in tubes—that | The other two icicles came in handy for crutches. We Bow to Mr. Bennett—(Continued from page 11) amid old gardens. Naturally. Only a person who had lived in and deeply loved a country place could have written this tale. The hero of the story is real country house. A mild, commonplace little man inherits it unexpectedly, comes on from town to arrange the disposition of it by auction (it is heavily mortgaged and unless it is sold, with all its antique fittings, he will get little out of his legacy) and then, as he waits for the day of the sale, gradually the place “gets” him, its , its age, its loveliness, its pride and pathos. The idea of letting it go comes to hurt him. He suffers. He sits at the auction and writhes. At last he can stand it no longer, and finds himself on his feet bidding the whole place in himself, though it means his practical impoverish- ment. Mrs. West calls this tale a love story. It is. But nobody can really un- derstand it who has not owned a house and a garden, preferably a very old house and very old garden, in the country. Kip- ling once wrote a similar tale, “An Habi- tation Enforced.” It could be done in America, too. “The Heir’ is such a good story that it makes us believe we could 28 write the American version. A good story always appears to have been created with- out effort, and makes do the same thing. ceed! 1s believe we could Alas, we never suc “Pte THOUSAND AND First Nicurt,” by rant Overton (Doran & Co.) aims for mething of the ceric quality of Kipling’s Wireless,” and almost gets it. An avi- ator, flying across the Atlantic alone. drops from the air into a mysterious and lonely house on the end of Long Island inhabited only by an aged sea captain and his granddaughter. He is a descendant of a man who two centuries before brouglit unwitting disaster to this girl's ancestors. How, in that lonely house, the same trag edy is reenacted forms the However, Mr. Overton keeps dragging in what happened two hundred years ago. Ex- position should all be in the first act Kipling, in “Wireles His exposition was all in the heads of his readers before he began, because he re- enacted the story of Keats. A shrew: bird, Kipling. Most of us can still go to school to him. * was wiser still. Os: atte ful. Eat inde flect poit she comicbooks.com